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Saturday, April 6, 2019

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Sunday, March 31, 2019

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Saturday, June 6, 2015

Download… video from Youtube without install extra downloader

Now it’s easy to download  video from Youtube without install extra downloader. Just follow few steps and get what you want . . .

                                     Step 01-     Download & Install Mozila Firefox (not required if exist )


  Step 02-    Go to Firefox option and click to add-ons
         
^




    Step 03 -  Type ----Youtube Video Downloader------ & Search . . .



Step- 4 ---     Select  a downloader & install it on your browser  



Step- 5 --     Close your Firefox browser &  reopen it & ENJOY




Thanks to visit my blog, stay & connect worldwide. . . 



Saturday, May 16, 2015

Facebook Hello (Call Anywhere Without Bill Using wifi)

Facebook has introduced a new app called "Hello," and it is an app built by the team behind the Messenger app.
The app is essentially a dialer for Android, allowing users to block numbers and see who is calling them, even if they don't have the number saved in their phone.
"Billions of calls are made everyday on mobile phones and people often have very little information about who's calling them," said
 Facebook in a blog post. "Today we are starting to test Hello, a new app built by the Messenger team. Hello connects with Facebook so you can see who's calling, block unwanted calls and search for people and places."
Hello is basically aimed at modernizing the phone call, a method of communication that is fast becoming obsolete. In the process of doing this, it puts Facebook at the center of the phone call experience, drawing from Facebook's database for caller ID information. Of course, Facebook will only display information of a user's friends or any information that is shared publicly.
Not only that, but the platform gives another opportunity for Facebook to promote its Wi-Fi calling feature in Messenger, which will, of course, be accessible from the Hello app.
Considering the fact that over one billion phone calls are still made by Americans every day, it makes sense that Facebook wants to get into the market. Despite this, there are a number of dialer replacement apps available for users, however, most are fine with simply using the default dialer app on Android. Even Google's own Hangouts Dialer has less than five million downloads, which is rather surprising considering it comes from Google.
Facebook has been trying to enter the mobile market more substantially for a few years now. The company launched "Home" in 2013 to much fanfare, but the Android Launcher was not adopted by nearly as many people as Facebook would have liked. Shortly afterward, Facebook stopped allowing users to use Messenger from within the Facebook app, essentially forcing users to download a new app on their phone. The reason for this recently became clear when Facebook launched Messenger as a platform, allowing developers to create and release apps for Messenger.
An important part of the app is that it can easily be installed on any phone, so for those who regularly change phones or have multiple phones for different purposes, family and friends will still know who the user is when they call.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

FREELANCING

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) Tools-


On Page Optimization
-----------------------------
1. Keyword Planner
2. SEO Quake
3. Website Research
* broken link/dead link check
* backlink/link biulding check
* web rank check
* page rank check
* alexa rank check
* no follow / do follow finder

Off Page Optimization
---------------------------
 1. web 2.0 creation
 2. blogging
 3. article writing
 4. blog commenting
 5. directory submission
 6. social bookmarking
 7. social Media Marketing (SMM) / Facebook Marekting
 8. creative writing
 9. content developing
10. link wheel
11. unic writing

Google Chrome's top 10 hidden features


From the iPad interface to quick calculations, Daniel Johnson brings you 10 of Google Chrome's best hidden features


1) Built-in task manager
Everyone knows Ctrl+Alt+Delete brings up Windows task manager. But did you know Google Chrome has its own?
Chrome treats each tab as a separate process so if just one of them starts causing a problem, instead of closing the entire browser, you can just kill the offending tab.
You can access it through Tools > Task Manager or by pressing Shift+Esc.

2) Paste and go/paste and search
Google Chrome has a useful shortcut if you want to copy a URL from another browser which you want to look at in Chrome, or if you want to search a piece of text, for example from a word document.
Instead of doing Ctfl+V and Enter in the address bar, instead you can just right click in the URL bar and choose “Paste and go”, or “Paste and search”, saving you valuable seconds.
Paste and go PHOTO: Google
Paste and search PHOTO: Google
3) Pin tab
The Pin tab feature is ideal for those tabs which you never close when browsing, such as email, or Twitter.
The tab you select will be locked to the extreme left, and will be converted to a smaller favicon.
It is ideal if you tend to browse with lots of different tabs open.
Here is how Gmail looks when pinned to the left.
4) iPad interface
Intrigued as to how your favourite sites look on iPad? Well you don’t need an iPad to find out.
Right click on the chrome shortcut on your desktop and select properties. Go to the “Shortcut” tab, and in the “Target” field you will find this text written (where “username” is your windows username): “C:\Users\username\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe
Replace the text with the text below, but make sure you have your own windows username after C: \Users\...
“C:\Users\username\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe-user-agent=”Mozilla/5.0(iPad; U; CPU iPhone OS 3_2 like Mac OS X; en-us) AppleWebKit/531.21.10 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/4.0.4 Mobile/7B314 Safari/531.21.10″
Press OK, and now when you open your Chrome browser for sites which have iPad versions such as Gmail, Twitter and YouTube, it will look as it does on an iPad.
A useful tool if you are considering buying an iPad and want to know what browsing will look like.
5) About:memory
This feature is one of the geekier ones, but Chrome’s “About memory” page – which can be accessed by typing “about:memory” into the address bar – gives details on how different processes in the browser are consuming memory.
6) Generate passwords
This is just one of the many things you can do by delving into Chrome Flags - Google Chrome’s experimental laboratory of new features.
Chrome even warns that you should be careful because “these experiments may bite”. It goes on: “These experimental features may change, break, or disappear at any time.
“We make absolutely no guarantees about what may happen if you turn one of these experiments on, and your browser may even spontaneously combust.”
One of those experimental features includes filling in passwords for you when you open an account creation page. You have to be signed into your Chrome account and have your password manager enabled for this handy shortcut to work.
Simply type “about:flags” into the Chrome address bar and find “Enable Password Generation”.
7) Tab overview
Sadly this one is only available on Mac, but it enables you to view all the tabs you have open in a simple tile display, in a similar way to all your windows on a MacBook desktop.
In “about:flags”, enable tab overview, and then swipe down with three fingers on your trackpad.
8) Stack tabs
Bored of all your tabs squeezing into the top of your screen until they become so small that you struggle to identify them?
This time, for Windows, try stacking your tabs.
Go to “about:flags” as previously, and find “Stacked Tabs”. Once it is enabled, the tabs won’t shrink and will stack on top of each other when space runs out. 
9) Incognito mode
Perhaps Incognito mode is not exactly hidden, but it still amazes me how many people do not know about this brilliant feature.
Google says it is “for times when you want to browse in stealth mode” (I will leave you to decide what they might be suggesting), but if you are concerned about privacy and the amount of information collected by Google when you are browsing, incognito mode stops Chrome from storing information about the websites you have visited.
It still has your bookmarks but the sites you visit will not be stored in your browser history.
Amusingly, when you open an incognito window, Google advices you to be wary of “malicious software”, “surveillance by secret agents”, and, best of all, “people standing behind you”.
10) Quick calculations
Google Chrome’s address bar has many uses, including doubling up as a Google search bar.
But if your maths is a bit rusty, it also can be used to make simple calculations. If you want to know 250 divided by 15, simply type in “250/15” into the address bar and it will show you the answer below.

Source ::: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/